The invention generally relates to methods for analyzing a metabolite level in a sample. In certain embodiments, methods of the invention may involve obtaining a sample, analyzing the sample using a mass spectrometry technique to determine a level of at least one metabolite in the sample, and correlating the metabolite level with an originating source of the sample, thereby analyzing the sample.
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1. A method for analyzing a tissue section, the method comprising:
depositing the tissue section onto a substrate, wherein the tissue section comprises at least one metabolite indicative of a cancer and a plurality of reference molecules that are not associated with the cancer;
conducting a desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) technique on one or more locations of the tissue section in order to desorb the at least one metabolite and the plurality of reference molecules from the one or more locations of the tissue section and direct the at least one metabolite and the plurality of reference molecules into a mass spectrometer to thereby generate a mass spectral signal of the at least one metabolite and a plurality of reference mass spectral signals at the one or more locations;
normalizing the mass spectral signal of the at least one metabolite at the one or more locations to a combination of the plurality of reference mass spectral signals from the tissue section in order to obtain a relative abundance of the at least one metabolite at the one or more locations within the tissue section; and
producing a mass spectral image of the tissue section that comprises a relative abundance of the at least one metabolite at the one or more locations within the tissue section, wherein the relative abundance of the at least one metabolite at the one or more locations within the tissue section is indicative of locations of cancerous tissue or non-neoplastic tissue within the tissue section.
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The present application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. nonprovisional application Ser. No. 13/475,305, filed May 18, 2012, which claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/487,363, filed May 18, 2011. The present application also claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/791,100, filed Mar. 15, 2013. The present application also claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/778,292, filed Mar. 12, 2013. The content of each application is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
This invention was made with government support under EB009459; awarded by the National Institutes of Health. The government has certain rights in the invention.
The invention generally relates to methods for analyzing a metabolite level in a sample.
Biological systems are increasingly viewed and analyzed as highly complex networks of interlinked macromolecules and metabolites. Metabolites are low molecular weight compounds (<1 kDa) involved in chemical reactions that occur inside cells of living organisms to uphold life, i.e. the process of metabolism. The chemical diversity of the metabolome, defined as the complement of all detectable metabolites, is large and includes a wide range of compound classes, e.g. carbohydrates, amino acids, organic acids, and sterols. The quantity and number of metabolites vary with changing conditions such as environment, diet and in response to disease. Significant time and money has been invested in order to investigate the relationship between metabolite alterations and biochemical mechanisms, including disease processes.
Methods for analysis of the metabolome include nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, gas chromatography (GC) and liquid chromatography (LC) coupled to mass spectrometry (MS). In addition, Fourier transform InfraRed spectroscopy (FTIR) has been used together with direct infusion mass spectrometry to analyze metabolites.
NMR and FTIR require minimal sample preparation, however, detection limits are higher compared to the MS-based techniques and elucidation of spectra composed of many metabolites can be problematic. A problem with MS-based methods is that they require complex sample preparation protocols that involve sample extraction, purification, and other work-up steps prior to sample analysis. Those preparation protocols in addition to the solvents used as part of the MS analysis destroy the native morphology of the sample, making it impossible to correlate diagnostic results with their originating source.
The invention generally relates to methods for analyzing a metabolite level in a sample. Aspects of the invention are accomplished using mass spectrometry techniques that are non-destructive of native tissue morphology. In that manner, a sample is analyzed by mass spectrometry to obtain a metabolite level in the sample, and because the analyzed sample remains intact, the metabolite level can be correlated with its originating source. Methods of the invention are useful for rapidly identifying abnormal tissue, such as cancerous tissue, and distinguishing abnormal tissue from normal tissue, which is important for indicating tumor margins.
Methods of the invention allow for analysis of any type of sample that includes metabolites, for example, human or animal tissue or plant tissue. In certain embodiments, the sample is human tissue. In those embodiments, methods of the invention may be performed on the tissue to obtain a molecular diagnosis and then the same tissue section can be used not only for H&E staining, but also for immunohistochemistry. Those advancements allow methods of the invention to be included in the tissue analysis clinical workflow. They also allow more detailed diagnostic information to be obtained by combining two orthogonal techniques, MS and histological examination.
There are numerous approaches that can be employed to conduct a mass spectral analysis of a sample without destroying the native morphology of the sample. In one embodiment, a mass spectrometry analysis technique utilizes a liquid phase that does not destroy native tissue morphology during analysis. Exemplary liquid phases include DMF, ACN, or THF. In certain embodiments, the DMF, ACN, or THF may be combined with at least one other component, such as EtOH, H2O, or a combination thereof. Exemplary combinations include ACN:EtOH, MeOH:CHCl3 or ACN:CHCl3.
In such embodiments, any mass spectrometry technique known in the art may be used with methods of the invention. Exemplary mass spectrometry techniques that utilize ionization sources at atmospheric pressure for mass spectrometry include electrospray ionization (ESI; Fenn et al., Science, 246:64-71, 1989; and Yamashita et al., J. Phys. Chem., 88:4451-4459, 1984); atmospheric pressure ionization (APCI; Carroll et al., Anal. Chem. 47:2369-2373, 1975); and atmospheric pressure matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (AP-MALDI; Laiko et al. Anal. Chem., 72:652-657, 2000; and Tanaka et al. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom., 2:151-153, 1988). The content of each of these references in incorporated by reference herein its entirety.
Exemplary mass spectrometry techniques that utilize direct ambient ionization/sampling methods include desorption electrospray ionization (DESI; Takats et al., Science, 306:471-473, 2004 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,335,897); direct analysis in real time (DART; Cody et al., Anal. Chem., 77:2297-2302, 2005); Atmospheric Pressure Dielectric Barrier Discharge Ionization (DBDI; Kogelschatz, Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing, 23:1-46, 2003, and PCT international publication number WO 2009/102766), and electrospray-assisted laser desoption/ionization (ELDI; Shiea et al., J. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 19:3701-3704, 2005). The content of each of these references is incorporated by reference herein its entirety.
In certain embodiments, the mass spectrometry technique is desorption electrospray ionization (DESI). DESI is an ambient ionization method that allows the direct ionization of species from thin tissue sections (Takats et al., Science, 306:471-473, 2004 and Takats, U.S. Pat. No. 7,335,897). DESI-MS imaging has been successfully used to diagnose multiple types of human cancers based on their lipid profiles detected directly from tissue (Eberlin L S, Ferreira C R, Dill A L, Ifa D R, & Cooks R G (2011) Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry for Lipid Characterization and Biological Tissue Imaging. Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta-Molecular And Cell Biology Of Lipids accepted).
In certain embodiments, DESI is operated in the imaging mode. Operated in an imaging mode, it uses a standard microprobe imaging procedure, which in this case involves moving the probe spray continuously across the surface while recording mass spectra. See for example, Wiseman et al. Nat. Protoc., 3:517, 2008, the content of which is incorporated by reference herein its entirety. Each pixel yields a mass spectrum, which can then be compiled to create an image showing the spatial distribution of a particular compound or compounds. Such an image allows one to visualize the differences in the distribution of particular compounds over the sample (e.g., a tissue section). If independent information on biological properties of the sample are available, then the MS spatial distribution can provide chemical correlations with biological function or morphology. Moreover, the combination of the information from mass spectrometry and histochemical imaging can be used to improve the quality of diagnosis.
In particular embodiments, the DESI ion source is a source configured as described in Ifa et al. (Int. J. Mass Spectrom. 259(8), 2007). A software program allows the conversion of the XCalibur 2.0 mass spectra files (.raw) into a format compatible with the Biomap software (freeware, http://www.maldo-msi.org). Spatially accurate images are assembled using the Biomap software.
Another approach used by methods of the invention utilizes a mass spectrometry technique that involves contacting a probe to an in situ sample such that a portion of the sample is retained on the probe once the probe has been removed from the sample, and applying solvent and a high voltage to the probe, thereby generating ions of an analyte from the portion of the sample on the probe. Such a technique allows one to obtain diagnostic information without the removal of the sample. Since the sample remains in situ, it is possible to correlate the results to the originating source.
Another approach used by methods of the invention utilizes a mass spectrometry technique that involves contacting a porous probe to an in situ sample such that a portion of the sample is retained on the porous probe once the probe has been removed from the sample, and applying solvent and a high voltage to the probe, thereby generating ions of an analyte from the portion of the sample on the probe. Such a technique allows one to obtain diagnostic information without the removal of the sample. Since the sample remains in situ, it is possible to correlate the results to the originating source.
Another aspect of the invention provides methods for identifying abnormal tissue. Those methods involve analyzing tissue using a mass spectrometry technique to determine a level of at least one metabolite in the tissue, correlating the metabolite level with an originating source of the tissue, and identifying the abnormal tissue.
The invention generally relates to methods for analyzing a metabolite level in a sample. In certain embodiments, methods of the invention involve obtaining a sample, analyzing the sample using a mass spectrometry technique to determine a level of at least one metabolite in the sample, and correlating the metabolite level with an originating source of the sample, thereby analyzing the sample.
A metabolite generally refers to any compound that is an intermediate or product of metabolism or a compound that is necessary for or taking part in a particular metabolic process. A metabolite is not limited to any particular class of compounds, and includes, for example, classes of compounds such as lipids, carbohydrates, amino acids, organic acids and sterols. A metabolite may be a primary metabolite (i.e., a compound that is directly involved in normal growth, development, and reproduction) or a secondary metabolite (i.e., a compound that is not directly involved in those processes, but usually has an important ecological function). In an exemplary embodiment, a metabolite may be a low molecular weight compounds (<1 kDa) that is the product of a chemical reaction or reactions that occur inside cells of living organisms, such as within human or animal or plant tissue. Living organisms also encompasses microorganisms, such as bacteria and fungus. In certain embodiments, a metabolite is an intermediate or a product of an enzymatic reaction, such as an enzymatic reaction that occurs within the cells of normal tissue or abnormal tissue, such as diseased tissue, such as cancerous tissue. Considerations related to metabolites are described, for example, in Harris et al., (Biochemical Facts behind the Definition and Properties of Metabolites, found at the website for the FDA on the page related to metabolites), the content of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Abnormal metabolite levels may be associated with a disease state, for example metabolic diseases, cardiovascular diseases, kidney diseases, liver diseases, gastrointestinal diseases, cancers, etc. In certain embodiments, the metabolites analyzed result from genetic aberrations that constitute particular disease states, including cancer, including endogenous compounds whose constitutive levels vary and de novo compounds (Dill, et al., A European Journal 17, 2897-2902 (2011); Dill et al., Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry 398, 2969-2978 (2010); Eberlin et al. Analytical chemistry 82, 3430-3434 (2010); and Eberlin et al. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2013)). Metabolites of interest are of diagnostic and/or prognostic value.
Metabolites may include those derived from the pathways associated with energy production, cellular signaling, and structure. Such metabolites include aerobic and anaerobic cellular respiration and synthesis of lipid constituents. The compounds from the alpha-hydroxy acid (AHA) class are implicated. The production of alpha-hydroxyglutaric acid (2-HG) in human brain tumors is particularly included. Mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenases (IDHs) deviates prototypical conversion of isocitrate to alpha-ketogluterate via oxidative decarboxylation. Additionally, beta and gamma hydroxy acids are implicated. Metabolites of interest in neural cancers include small amino acid neurotransmitters (e.g. aspartate, glutamate, GABA, glycine, etc), neuropeptides, opioids (e.g. endorphin), monoamines (e.g. dopamine and serotonin), and diamines (e.g. histamine). These metabolites and related anabolic and catabolic intermediates are included, such as in the case of N-acetylaspartylgluterate (NAAG) synthesized de novo from N-acetylaspartate and glutamic acid. Sulfonic acid metabolites are also implicated, e.g. taurine.
Also included are specific modifications facilitated by enzymatic linkage of sulfate groups and similar functionalities, i.e. cholesterol sulfate. Endogenous compounds representing metabolites that might vary in concentration include the major metabolites of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (e.g. citrate, isocitrate, alpha-ketogluterate, succinate, fumarate, malate, and oxaloacetate), glycolysis (e.g. glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, etc), and similar energy production metabolites. Signaling metabolites including but not limited to prostaglandins, cytokines, and hormones would be similarly included. Finally, lipid constituents, known to vary in accordance with disease state, should be noted as important metabolites (Eberlin, et al., Angewandte Chemie 49, 5953-5956 (2010); and Eberlin, et al., Cancer research 72, 645-654 (2012)). In certain embodiments, the metabolites analyzed are aspartic acid, ascorbic acid, glutamic acid, and taurine (inverse dependence).
A sample may be any material that includes one or more metabolites. In certain embodiments, the sample is an ex vivo sample. Such ex vivo samples are obtained in an clinically acceptable manner. In other embodiments, the sample is an in situ sample. In certain embodiments, the sample may be human, animal, or plant tissue or body fluid. In certain embodiments, the sample includes a microorganism to be analyzed. In particular embodiments, the sample is human tissue or body fluid. A tissue is a mass of connected cells and/or extracellular matrix material, e.g. skin tissue, endometrial tissue, nasal passage tissue, CNS tissue, neural tissue, eye tissue, liver tissue, kidney tissue, placental tissue, mammary gland tissue, placental tissue, gastrointestinal tissue, musculoskeletal tissue, genitourinary tissue, bone marrow, brain tissue, and the like, derived from, for example, a human or other mammal and includes the connecting material and the liquid material in association with the cells and/or tissues. A body fluid is a liquid material derived from, for example, a human or other mammal. Such body fluids include, but are not limited to, mucous, blood, plasma, serum, serum derivatives, bile, blood, maternal blood, phlegm, saliva, sweat, amniotic fluid, menstrual fluid, mammary fluid, follicular fluid of the ovary, fallopian tube fluid, peritoneal fluid, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), such as lumbar or ventricular CSF. A sample may also be a fine needle aspirate or biopsied tissue. A sample also may be media containing cells or biological material. A sample may also be a blood clot, for example, a blood clot that has been obtained from whole blood after the serum has been removed.
The sample is then analyzed using a mass spectrometry technique that is non-destructive of native tissue morphology. In that manner, a sample is analyzed by mass spectrometry to obtain a metabolite level in the sample, and because the analyzed sample remains intact, the metabolite level can be correlated with its originating source. There are numerous approaches that can be employed to conduct a mass spectral analysis of a sample without destroying the native morphology of the sample. Some of those approaches are discussed below.
Non-Destructive Solvents
In certain embodiments, the present invention provides new methodologies by which mass spectral analysis (such as ambient tissue imaging by desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry) of a sample, such as a tissue sample can be performed while morphology of the tissue section is kept intact or unmodified. Such an approach allows the metabolite level to be correlated with its originating source, while also allowing subsequent analysis of the tissue by histochemistry or many other techniques to be performed. This is a new methodology for non-destructive, morphologically friendly tissue analysis by mass spectrometry techniques, such as desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Thus in certain aspects, the invention provides methods for analyzing tissue that involve analyzing a tissue sample using a mass spectrometry technique, in which the technique utilizes a liquid phase that does not destroy native tissue morphology during analysis. In certain embodiments, analyzing involves imaging a tissue section.
In certain embodiments, methods of the invention allow extraction of metabolites from tissue during DESI-MS analysis while morphology of the tissue remains undisturbed, therefore the metabolite level to be correlated with its originating source, while also allowing subsequent analysis to be performed on the same tissue section. Particularly, methods of the invention allow high-quality 2D DESI-MS ion images to be directly compared and even overlaid with the H&E stained tissue section, allowing a better correlation between the spatial distribution of the metabolite species detected and the substructures of the tissue sample, such as a subject's brain. Pathological evaluation of the tissue sections confirmed that no morphological damage was caused to the tissue as a result of DESI-MS imaging when using appropriate solvents.
In certain aspects, the invention provides methods for imaging a metabolite containing sample (e.g., a tissue sample) that involve imaging a metabolite containing sample using a direct ambient ionization/sampling technique, in which the technique is performed in a manner that allows the sample to be subjected to identification and further analysis after imaging.
Another aspect of the invention provides analysis methods that involve obtaining a metabolite containing sample, imaging the sample using a mass spectrometry technique, in which the technique utilizes a liquid phase that does not destroy native tissue morphology during analysis, and performing a histochemistry analysis technique on the sample.
Another aspect of the invention provides methods for diagnosing cancer that involve obtaining a metabolite containing sample, imaging the sample using a mass spectrometry technique, in which the technique utilizes a liquid phase that does not destroy native tissue morphology during analysis, performing a histochemistry analysis technique on the sample, and diagnosing a cancer based results of the imaging and the performing steps.
Any mass spectrometry technique known in the art may be used with methods of the invention. Exemplary mass spectrometry techniques that utilize ionization sources at atmospheric pressure for mass spectrometry include electrospray ionization (ESI; Fenn et al., Science, 246:64-71, 1989; and Yamashita et al., J. Phys. Chem., 88:4451-4459, 1984); atmospheric pressure ionization (APCI; Carroll et al., Anal. Chem. 47:2369-2373, 1975); and atmospheric pressure matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (AP-MALDI; Laiko et al. Anal. Chem., 72:652-657, 2000; and Tanaka et al. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom., 2:151-153, 1988). The content of each of these references in incorporated by reference herein its entirety.
Exemplary mass spectrometry techniques that utilize direct ambient ionization/sampling methods include desorption electrospray ionization (DESI; Takats et al., Science, 306:471-473, 2004 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,335,897); direct analysis in real time (DART; Cody et al., Anal. Chem., 77:2297-2302, 2005); Atmospheric Pressure Dielectric Barrier Discharge Ionization (DBDI; Kogelschatz, Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing, 23:1-46, 2003, and PCT international publication number WO 2009/102766), and electrospray-assisted laser desoption/ionization (ELDI; Shiea et al., J. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 19:3701-3704, 2005). The content of each of these references in incorporated by reference herein its entirety.
In certain embodiments, the mass spectrometry technique is desorption electrospray ionization (DESI). DESI is an ambient ionization method that allows the direct ionization of species from thin tissue sections (Takats et al., Science, 306:471-473, 2004 and Takats, U.S. Pat. No. 7,335,897). DESI-MS imaging has been successfully used to diagnose multiple types of human cancers (Eberlin L S, Ferreira C R, Dill A L, Ifa D R, & Cooks R G (2011) Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry for Lipid Characterization and Biological Tissue Imaging. Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta-Molecular And Cell Biology Of Lipids accepted); (Cooks R G, et al. (2011), Faraday Discussions 149:247-267).
Multivariate statistical analysis of the DESI-MS imaging data by means of principal component analysis and partial least squares discriminant analysis allowed a successful correlation between DESI-MS data and pathological evaluation in 88% of the cases analyzed (Dill A L, et al. (2011), Chemistry—a European Journal 17(10):2897-2902). DESI-MS imaging was also applied for the diagnosis of human cancers including; two types of kidney cancer (Dill A L, et al. (2010), Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 398(7-8):2969-2978); human prostate cancer (Eberlin L S, et al. (2010), Analytical Chemistry 82(9):3430-3434); and the grading of brain gliomas (WHO grade II, grade III and grade IV (glioblastoma; Eberlin L S, et al. (2010), Angewandte Chemie-International Edition 49(34):5953-5956).
In addition to cancer diagnostics, DESI-MS imaging has been used to characterize tissues of other disease states, such as chemically profiling and imaging of human arterial plaques with atherosclerosis (Manicke N E, et al. (2009), Analytical Chemistry 81(21):8702-8707). In addition to the possibility of supplementing the DESI-MS solvent with ionization facilitator compounds (Jackson A U, Shum T, Sokol E, Dill A, & Cooks R G (2011), Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 399(1):367-376), a unique capability of DESI-MS is the possibility to use reactants in the solvent to facilitate the ionization (reactive DESI) and detect important metabolic intermediates that can be difficult to ionize, such as cholesterol (Wu C P, Ifa D R, Manicke N E, & Cooks R G (2009), Analytical Chemistry 81(18):7618-7624).
Operated in an imaging mode, it uses a standard microprobe imaging procedure, which in this case involves moving the probe spray continuously across the surface while recording mass spectra. See for example, Wiseman et al. Nat. Protoc., 3:517, 2008, the content of which is incorporated by reference herein its entirety. Each pixel yields a mass spectrum, which can then be compiled to create an image showing the spatial distribution of a particular compound or compounds. Such an image allows one to visualize the differences in the distribution of particular compounds over the lipid containing sample (e.g., a tissue section). If independent information on biological properties of the sample are available, then the MS spatial distribution can provide chemical correlations with biological function or morphology. Moreover, the combination of the information from mass spectrometry and histochemical imaging can be used to improve the quality of diagnosis.
In particular embodiments, the DESI ion source is a source configured as described in Ifa et al. (Int. J. Mass Spec/rom. 259(8), 2007). A software program allows the conversion of the XCalibur 2.0 mass spectra files (.raw) into a format compatible with the Biomap software (freeware, http://www.maldo-msi.org). Spatially accurate images are assembled using the Biomap software.
Methods of the invention involve using a liquid phase that does not destroy native tissue morphology. Any liquid phase that does not destroy native tissue morphology and is compatible with mass spectrometry may be used with methods of the invention. Exemplary liquid phases include DMF, ACN, and THF. In certain embodiments, the liquid phase is DMF. In certain embodiments, the DMF is used in combination with another component, such as EtOH, H2O, ACN, and a combination thereof. Other exemplary liquid phases that do not destroy native tissue morphology include ACN:EtOH, MeOH:CHCl3, and ACN:CHCl3.
In certain embodiments, methods of the invention involve performing a histochemical analysis on the tissue sample after it has been subjected to mass spectrometric analysis. Any histochemical analytical technique known in the art may be performed on the tissue, and the performed technique will depend on the goal of the analysis. Exemplary histochemical analytical techniques include H&E staining or immunohistochemistry.
Touch Spray
Aspects of the invention are accomplished using systems that include a probe having a tip composed of non-porous material. The tip is configured to contact a sample and retain a portion of the sample once the probe has been removed from the sample. Such a technique allows one to obtain diagnostic information without the removal of the sample. Since the sample remains in situ, it is possible to correlate the results to the originating source.
An electrode is coupled to the probe, and the probe is operably coupled to a mass analyzer. In certain embodiments, the probe includes a hollow inner bore in communication with the tip. Such a configuration allows solvent to be infused through the bore to interact with the sample to facilitate generation of ions of an analyte from the portion of the sample on the probe. Exemplary probes include scalpels, needles, burrs, paper clips, etc. In certain embodiments, the system further includes a source of nebulizing gas. The source of nebulizing gas may be configured to provide pulses of gas. Alternatively, the source of nebulizing gas may be configured to provide a continuous flow of gas.
Other aspects of the invention provide methods for analyzing a sample. The methods involve contacting a tip of a probe to a sample such that a portion of the sample is retained on the probe once the probe has been removed from the sample. The methods additionally involve applying solvent and a high voltage to the probe, thereby generating ions of an analyte from the portion of the sample on the probe, and analyzing the ions. In certain embodiments, the probe is composed of a non-porous material. An exemplary analysis technique is mass spectrometry.
Systems and methods of the invention may be used to analyze any metabolite containing sample, and are particularly useful for analyzing tissue samples, specifically in situ tissue samples.
Other aspects of the invention provide methods for analyzing tissue for a cancer. Those methods involve contacting a probe to an in situ tissue sample such that a portion of the sample is retained on the probe once the probe has been removed from the sample. The methods additionally involve applying solvent and a high voltage to the probe, thereby generating ions of an analyte from the portion of the sample on the probe, and analyzing the ions for an indication of cancer. The steps of the method may be performed iteratively around the in situ tissue sample to determine margins of a tumor.
Using this technique, mass spectral profiles are acquired rapidly (typically less than approximately one (1) second) with the spatial resolution determined directly by the probe's touch. Mass spectral profiles may also be averaged over time, such as approximately twenty (20) seconds. By sampling a point or a number of points the method of analyzing the tissue surface is fast with no sample preparation. The method of analysis can also be undertaken intra-operatively which may be important in establishing disease margins on a time scale that is useful during surgery.
In certain embodiments, Touch Spray can be used to identify positive margins in a manner that will allow surgical intervention during the operative procedure. In certain embodiments, Touch Spray identifies metabolite markers, such as lipid markers, that detect positive margins in the operating room to enable additional resection if needed and detect markers of cancer aggressiveness. Given that cancer patients may have positive margins, the impact of additional resection for residual disease will be determined in a relatively short time frame.
Touch Spray provides a method for intra-surgical diagnostics by MS on a point-to-point basis. An advantage of Touch Spray over other mass spectrometry techniques is its ability to sample tissues in vivo and immediately analyze ex vivo, leaving the in situ sample intact so that metabolite levels can be rapidly correlated back to the origin of the sample. Touch Spray allows diagnostic information to be obtained without the removal of tissue sample.
Spot analysis by Touch Spray allows for detailed and automated comparisons of metabolite profiles with those associated with pathological conditions. This ambient ionization spray-based technique provides information on a wide range of compounds. Furthermore this technique works in both positive and negative ion modes. Both modes are complementary and similarly informative. Hence, the wide range of metabolite molecular information can be utilized in defining disease in current and retrospective examinations.
Systems and methods of the invention find particular use in disease diagnostics, particularly cancer diagnostics and in the operating room to determine tumor margins. Currently, tissue is first removed and then examined by a pathologist. The pathologist evaluates whether or not the removed tissue has margins of healthy tissue. The pathologist relays the evaluation to the surgeon which gives the surgeon information regarding whether or not to remove more tissue. Using Touch Spray, the surgeon can make the decision to resect more tissue or not to resect based on mass spectral data suggesting that the investigated sample, in this case tissue, is diseased or not. It is envisioned that under ideal conditions analysis by touch spray may result in resection of almost only cancerous tissue, leaving almost all healthy tissue behind.
Touch spray is performed by two basic steps: (1) touching a sample with a probe in order to transfer analyte from the sample to the probe and (2) spraying analyte on the probe into a mass spectrometer. The first step includes touching the surface of a sample, such as tissue, with a probe including an end such as a metallic point and/or a roughened surface. The step of touching a sample can be performed in a variety of ways including dry, wet, and dip. A probe may be moistened by the addition of 1-2 μL of extractive solvent. A wet touch may facilitate the transfer of analytes from the sample to the probe surface. A wetted probe including solvated analyte may be allowed to dry. Drying under these conditions typically takes less than 30 seconds but can vary based on the solvent composition and volume of solvent applied to the probe. After the previously wetted probe has essentially dried, the probe with analyte is placed in front of a mass spectrometer and analyzed in a procedural manner similar to electrospray ionization or dry touch. Because the in situ sample remains intact, it is possible to correlate the diagnostic results, e.g., metabolite levels, to their originating source.
Another aspect of touching is the amount or degree of contact between the probe and the sample. A probe may touch a sample in a variety of ways including point, line, and area. A point touch may include a single point touch such as when the probe includes a tip or a multiple point touch such as when the probe includes an area at an end. A point touch of a surface of a sample may include a small circular motion of the probe and may affect a small amount of sample material, typically not more than 1 mm in diameter. A line touch occurs when the probe is touched to a surface at a starting point and traversed to another point. The movement may be by straight line or by a scratch.
The step of spraying includes the application of solvent and voltage to the probe placed in close proximity to the inlet of a mass spectrometer. The mass spectrometer is capable of analyzing the analyte in a procedural manner similar to electrospray ionization. The step of spraying analyte from the probe into a mass spectrometer can be performed in a variety of ways including variations in solvent, solvent application, application in high voltage, and probe placement.
The application of spray solvent to the probe can be performed in a variety of ways including two methods: (1) discontinuous and (2) continuous. Discontinuous application includes applying approximately 1-2 μL of solvent to the probe. Typically solvent is applied using a micropipettor to aid in obtaining reproducible results. The location of solvent application (i.e, where solvent lands on the probe), often no more than a few millimeters, is important for electrospray formation, spray stability, and thus the quality of mass spectra obtained. The location of solvent application varies based on probe geometry, surface, and spray solvent composition. Continuous application of solvent includes spray solvent delivered via a solvent transfer line, connected to a solvent source such as a syringe, and possibly driven by a syringe pump. The location of spray solvent application is important to proper functioning, analogous to the discontinuous method. Continuous application of the spray solvent allows for on/off switching by either removing the application of high voltage to the probe or ceasing solvent flow via the syringe pump.
The application of high voltage (for example, within the range of approximately 3-approximately 5 kilovolts) to the probe can be made directly via metal connector or inductively. The location of high voltage application is less important to spray formation in the case of a metallic probe, but is more important in less conductive materials. High voltage application may be applied after probe placement in an optional holding device and prior or essentially simultaneous to solvent application.
Touch Spray can be used to analyze tissue, as described in the Examples below. For in situ sampling, Touch Spray can be performed using a probe fitted with a small flattened needle connected to a small reservoir of solvent that will be touched onto tissue to allow a small amount of material to adhere. The probe will be held in front of a miniature mass spectrometer, a voltage will be applied to the probe and the solvent will cause a spray of droplets into the MS.
Reactive Touch Spray possesses the ability to perform chemical derivatization concurrently with mass spectral analysis, allowing for specific analytes to be distinguished and/or enhanced. Reactions are not confined to only covalent bond formation but include reactive intermediates and gas-phase adduction products as well. The reagents used in Reactive Touch Spray can be added to the spray solvent, continuous or discontinuous, or applied to the probe prior to touching. Touch Spray can be used in the detection of metabolites from samples. In an exemplary embodiment, the metabolite is a lipid metabolite, and the lipids patterns are useful in differentiating disease states.
Ionization Using Wetted Porous Material
In other embodiments, mass spectrometry probes made of porous material are used with methods of the invention. This embodiment involves contacting a porous probe to an in situ sample such that a portion of the sample is retained on the porous probe once the probe has been removed from the sample, and applying solvent and a high voltage to the probe, thereby generating ions of an analyte from the portion of the sample on the probe. Such a technique allows one to obtain diagnostic information without the removal of the sample. Since the sample remains in situ, it is possible to correlate the results to the originating source.
Probes comprised of porous material that is wetted to produce ions are described in Ouyang et al. (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/265,110 and PCT application number PCT/US10/32881), the content of each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. An exemplary probe is shown in
In certain embodiments, the porous material is any cellulose-based material. In other embodiments, the porous material is a non-metallic porous material, such as cotton, linen wool, synthetic textiles, or plant tissue. In still other embodiments, the porous material is paper. Advantages of paper include: cost (paper is inexpensive); it is fully commercialized and its physical and chemical properties can be adjusted; it can filter particulates (cells and dusts) from liquid samples; it is easily shaped (e.g., easy to cut, tear, or fold); liquids flow in it under capillary action (e.g., without external pumping and/or a power supply); and it is disposable.
In certain embodiments, the porous material is integrated with a solid tip having a macroscopic angle that is optimized for spray. In these embodiments, the porous material is used for filtration, pre-concentration, and wicking of the solvent containing the analytes for spray at the solid type.
In particular embodiments, the porous material is filter paper. Exemplary filter papers include cellulose filter paper, ashless filter paper, nitrocellulose paper, glass microfiber filter paper, and polyethylene paper. Filter paper having any pore size may be used. Exemplary pore sizes include Grade 1 (11 μm), Grade 2 (8 μm), Grade 595 (4-7 μm), and Grade 6 (3 μm). Pore size will not only influence the transport of liquid inside the spray materials, but could also affect the formation of the Taylor cone at the tip. The optimum pore size will generate a stable Taylor cone and reduce liquid evaporation. The pore size of the filter paper is also an important parameter in filtration, i.e., the paper acts as an online pretreatment device. Commercially available ultra-filtration membranes of regenerated cellulose, with pore sizes in the low nm range, are designed to retain particles as small as 1000 Da. Ultra filtration membranes can be commercially obtained with molecular weight cutoffs ranging from 1000 Da to 100,000 Da.
Probes of the invention work well for the generation of micron scale droplets simply based on using the high electric field generated at an edge of the porous material. In particular embodiments, the porous material is shaped to have a macroscopically sharp point, such as a point of a triangle, for ion generation. Probes of the invention may have different tip widths. In certain embodiments, the probe tip width is at least about 5 μm or wider, at least about 10 μm or wider, at least about 50 μm or wider, at least about 150 μm or wider, at least about 250 μm or wider, at least about 350 μm or wider, at least about 400μ, or wider, at least about 450 μm or wider, etc. In particular embodiments, the tip width is at least 350 μm or wider. In other embodiments, the probe tip width is about 400 μm. In other embodiments, probes of the invention have a three dimensional shape, such as a conical shape.
As mentioned above, no pneumatic assistance is required to transport the droplets. Ambient ionization of analytes is realized on the basis of these charged droplets, offering a simple and convenient approach for mass analysis of solution-phase samples. Sample solution is directly applied on the porous material held in front of an inlet of a mass spectrometer without any pretreatment. Then the ambient ionization is performed by applying a high potential on the wetted porous material. In certain embodiments, the porous material is paper, which is a type of porous material that contains numerical pores and microchannels for liquid transport. The pores and microchannels also allow the paper to act as a filter device, which is beneficial for analyzing physically dirty or contaminated samples. In other embodiments, the porous material is treated to produce microchannels in the porous material or to enhance the properties of the material for use as a probe of the invention. For example, paper may undergo a patterned silanization process to produce microchannels or structures on the paper. Such processes involve, for example, exposing the surface of the paper to tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydrooctyl-1-trichlorosilane to result in silanization of the paper.
In other embodiments, a soft lithography process is used to produce microchannels in the porous material or to enhance the properties of the material for use as a probe of the invention. In other embodiments, hydrophobic trapping regions are created in the paper to pre-concentrate less hydrophilic compounds. Hydrophobic regions may be patterned onto paper by using photolithography, printing methods or plasma treatment to define hydrophilic channels with lateral features of 200˜1000 μm. See Martinez et al. (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2007, 46, 1318-1320); Martinez et al. (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2008, 105, 19606-19611); Abe et al. (Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 6928-6934); Bruzewicz et al. (Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 3387-3392); Martinez et al. (Lab Chip 2008, 8, 2146-2150); and Li et al. (Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 9131-9134), the content of each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Liquid samples loaded onto such a paper-based device can travel along the hydrophilic channels driven by capillary action.
References and citations to other documents, such as patents, patent applications, patent publications, journals, books, papers, web contents, have been made throughout this disclosure. All such documents are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
Various modifications of the invention and many further embodiments thereof, in addition to those shown and described herein, will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the full contents of this document, including references to the scientific and patent literature cited herein. The subject matter herein contains important information, exemplification and guidance that can be adapted to the practice of this invention in its various embodiments and equivalents thereof.
This example shows mass spectrometry analysis of a lipid metabolite performed in a non-destructive matter, so that the metabolite level can be correlated to its originating source, and so that other analyses of the same sample can be performed after the mass spectrometry analysis is performed. This technique, which uses a variety of solvent systems for imaging, allows mass spectrometry analysis (e.g., DESI-MS imaging) of chemical compounds to be performed on lipid metabolite containing samples (e.g., tissue sections), while the morphology of the tissue remains unmodified. After DESI-MS imaging, the tissue can be correlated back to its originating source, while also being used for H&E staining, immunohistochemistry, and any other tissue analysis technique to obtain more information on the distribution of its chemical constituents.
A frozen mouse brain from a male mouse was purchased from Rockland Immunochemicals, Inc. (Gilbertsville, Pa., USA) and stored at −80° C. until it was sliced into coronary sections of varying thickness (2 μm, 3 μm, 5 μm and 15 μm) using a Shandon SME Cryotome cryostat (GMI, Inc., Ramsey, Minn., USA) and thaw mounted onto glass slides. The glass slides were stored in a closed container at −80° C. until analysis, when they were allowed to come to room temperature and dried in a dessicator for approximately 15 minutes. All human tissue samples were handled in accordance with approved institutional review board (IRB) protocols at Indiana University School of Medicine. Six human bladder cancer and paired normal samples, four human prostate cancer and paired normal samples and one human kidney cancer and paired normal sample were obtained from the Indiana University Medical School Tissue Bank. All tissue samples were flash frozen in liquid nitrogen at the time of collection and subsequently stored at −80° C. until sliced into 5 or 10 μm thick sections. The 5 and 15 μm thick sections were used for DESI-MS imaging experiments followed by either p63 immunohistochemistry or H&E stain, respectively. Tissue sections not analyzed by DESI-MS were used in control experiments. The thin tissue sections were thaw mounted to glass slides; each slide containing one section of tumor tissue and one section of adjacent normal tissue from the same patient. The glass slides were stored in closed containers at −80° C. Prior to analysis, they were allowed to come to room temperature and then dried in a dessicator for approximately 15 minutes.
The DESI ion source was a lab-built prototype, similar to a commercial source from Prosolia Inc. (Indianapolis, Ind. USA), configured as described elsewhere (Watrous J D, Alexandrov T, & Dorrestein P C (2011), Journal of Mass Spectrometry 46(2):209-222). It consists of an inner capillary (fused silica, 50 μm i.d., 150 μm o.d.) (Polymicro Technologies, AZ, USA) for delivering the spray solvent and an outer capillary (250 μm i.d., 350 μm o.d.) for delivering nitrogen nebulizing gas. The DESI spray was positioned 2.5 mm from the tissue sample at an incident angle of 54°. A low collection angle of 10° was chosen to ensure the most efficient collection of the material being desorbed. The distance between the spray and the inlet was 6.0 mm. Multiple spray solvent systems were tested in this example, including ACN, H2O, MeOH, ethanol (EtOH), tetrahydrofuran (THF), N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF), chloroform (CHCl3), acetone and many of their binary mixtures in a ratio of (1:1). The only tertiary mixture investigated was of ACN:H2O:DMF at different v/v proportions, such as (8:3:1 and 1:1:1). DESI-MS experiments were carried out in the negative ion mode, using a 5 kV spray voltage and a flow rate of 0.5-1.5 μL/min depending on the solvent system of choice. The nebulizing gas (N2) pressure was set for all experiments at 175-180 psi. The mass spectrometer used was a LTQ linear ion trap mass spectrometer controlled by XCalibur 2.0 software (Thermo Fisher Scientific, San Jose, Calif., USA).
Analyses were performed using an imaging approach. The tissues were scanned using a 2D moving stage in horizontal rows separated by a 150 μm vertical step for the mouse brain imaging assay (
Tissue sections were subjected to H&E staining after DESI-MS imaging analysis or after being dried in a dessicator (control sections). All chemicals used for the H&E staining were purchased from Sigma-Alrich (St. Louis, Mo., USA). The H&E staining was performed at room temperature: dip in MeOH for 2 minutes, rinse in water (10 dips), stain in Harris modified hematoxylin solution for 1.5 minutes, rinse in water (10 dips), 1 quick dip in 0.1% ammonia (blueing agent), rinse in water (10 dips), counterstain in Eosin Y (8 seconds), rinse in 100% EtOH (10 dips), rinse again in 100% EtOH (10 dips), rinse in Xylene (6 dips) and rinse again in Xylene (6 dips). Sections were allowed to dry and covered with a glass cover slide. Immunohistochemistry assays were performed in the Veterinary Department at Purdue University, in accordance to their standard protocol. The primary antibody p63 (4A4):sc-8431 was purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, INC (Santa Cruz, Calif., USA).
Pathological evaluation of the human tissue sections that were either H&E stained or subjected to p63 immunohistochemistry was performed at IU School of Medicine in a blind fashion. Optical images of tissue sections were obtained using a SM-LUX Binocular Brightfield Microscope (Leitz, Wetzlar, Germany) under 16, 25 and 40× magnification.
The solvent system used in DESI tissue imaging is taught to be an important technical parameter for optimization (Badu-Tawiah A, Bland C, Campbell D I, & Cooks R G (2010), Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 21(4):572-579; and Green F M, Salter T L, Gilmore I S, Stokes P, & O'Connor G (2010), Analyst 135(4):731-737). Many studies have shown that the chemical and physical properties of the solvent system used affect the molecular information obtained during DESI-MS tissue imaging (Ellis S R, et al. (2010), J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 21(12):2095-2104). Optimization of the spray composition allows targeted classes of compounds to be enhanced depending on the overall goal. Besides the chemical information, the effect of the solvent system on the morphology of the tissue being analyzed is a factor in DESI-MS imaging. Commonly used DESI-MS imaging solvent systems, such as mixtures of water with methanol or acetonitrile (Wiseman J M, Ifa D R, Venter A, & Cooks R G (2008), Nature Protocols 3(3):517-524), with or without an acidic modifier, yield extensive chemical information but are known to cause depletion and destruction of the tissue sections, precluding correlation of metabolite levels by to their originating source or precluding any consecutive analysis to be performed. To overcome these problems, different solvents such as ACN, H2O, MeOH, ethanol (EtOH), tetrahydrofuran (THF), N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF), chloroform (CHCl3), acetone and mixtures of these were investigated in the analysis of 15 μm thick serial coronary mouse brain tissue sections.
A binary mixture of MeOH:H2O (1:1, v/v) or ACN:H2O (1:1, v/v) has been commonly used in DESI imaging of brain tissue, yielding high signal intensity for polar lipids and free fatty acids (Eberlin L S, Ifa D R, Wu C, & Cooks R G (2010), Angewandte Chemie-International Edition 49(5):873-876; and Wiseman J M, Ifa D R, Song Q Y, & Cooks R G (2006), Angewandte Chemie-International Edition 45(43):7188-7192). The majority of the ions observed in the mass spectra obtained from the solvent systems tested here correspond to commonly observed lipid species in brain tissue when using standard MeOH:H2O (1:1), such as deprotonated free fatty acids, phosphatidylserines (PS), phosphatidylinositols (PI) and sulfatides (ST) (Eberlin L S, Ifa D R, Wu C, & Cooks R G (2010), Angewandte Chemie-International Edition 49(5):873-876). Variations in the relative abundance of the lipid species and in the total ion signal obtained were observed depending on the solvent composition. For instance, spectra obtained when using pure methanol as the solvent system showed higher relative abundance of fatty acid dimers in the m/z 500-700 region of the mass spectrum. In particular, it was observed that pure DMF yielded spectra with high total abundance and with chemical information that is very similar to that which is obtained using MeOH:H2O.
Interestingly, the DMF spray was observed to not cause tissue destruction. The effect of DMF in the tissue was further explored by combining this solvent with other solvents in binary (1:1 v/v) and tertiary mixtures. The combination of DMF with either ACN, EtOH, THF or CHCl3 yielded very high ion signal and chemical information similar to what is seen using MeOH:H2O. Combinations of DMF with either H2O or MeOH greatly enhanced the signal of low molecular weight compounds, such as small metabolites, FAs and FA dimers (Eberlin L S, Ferreira C R, Dill A L, Ifa D R, & Cooks R G (2011) Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry for Lipid Characterization and Biological Tissue Imaging. Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta-Molecular And Cell Biology Of Lipids accepted). In terms of spray stability and total ion abundance, the combinations of DMF with either EtOH or ACN are great solvent systems for tissue imaging experiments. The change in chemical information obtained by DESI-MS using different solvent combinations can be compared to the use of different matrices in MALDI imaging, but in DESI-MS imaging experiments, the “matrix” is delivered in real-time, spot-by-spot, without the need for sample preparation or without causing spatial delocalization of molecules.
Importantly, none of these solvent combinations were observed to cause visual damage to the 15 μm thick tissue sections that were analyzed.
As observed in the optical images shown of the DESI-MS experiment, damage to the tissue was insignificant when using DMF solvent systems. To confirm preservation of tissue integrity, H&E staining was performed on the tissue sections previously analyzed by DESI-MS. H&E staining is a commonly used histochemical protocol to evaluate cellular structure and tissue morphology by light microscopy. Careful microscopic examination of the H&E tissue sections revealed no damage or change in the cellular morphology of the sample after DESI analysis using DMF:EtOH and DMF:H2O solvent systems, while the tissue analyzed using MeOH:H2O was found to be altered and damaged, as was macroscopically observed. DESI-MS analysis of sequential mouse brain tissue sections of 2, 3 and 5 μm thicknesses was also performed, and sequential H&E staining of the tissue sections also revealed that no morphological damage occurred following DESI-MS analysis using DMF:EtOH or DMF:ACN as the solvent system.
The physical and chemical effect of the DMF:EtOH solvent system was further investigated by performing several DESI-MS analyses of the same mouse brain tissue section. The same tissue region of a 5 μm and a 15 μm thick tissue section were analyzed 10 times using the DESI-MS moving stage system. Mass spectra were recorded for 10 rows (250 μm step size) of each mouse brain section and after 10 analyses had been performed, each tissue section was H&E stained and observed under brightfield microscopy under 16-40× magnification.
Interestingly, the signal of the typical ion of m/z 834.4 obtained in the 3rd or even 4th DESI-MS analysis was still observed at high intensities. Furthermore, the decay profile of the ion count is consistent with the extraction mechanism proposed for DESI-MS (Costa A B & Cooks R G (2008), Chem. Phys. Lett. 464(1-3):1-8). While a MeOH:H2O spray extracts the chemical compounds from the tissue cells resulting in tissue damage, the DMF based solvent system is able to extract the chemical compounds from the tissue section without disturbing the tissue morphology. H&E staining of both a 5 μm and a 15 μm thick tissue section after ten DESI-MS imaging analyses revealed no damage to the tissue, indicating that the repetitive removal of the phospholipids by the DESI solvent spray does not affect the morphology of the cells. In fact, the extraction process that occurs in DESI-MS is comparable to the fixative procedures commonly used in histology for lipid removal (DiDonato D & Brasaemle D L (2003), Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry 51(6):773-780), such as the alcohol wash used in the initial step of the H&E staining data. This alcohol wash step extracts the majority of cellular phospholipids while the cellular cytoskeletal elements are kept intact. Since hematoxylin stains nucleoproteins and eosin stains intracellular and extracellular proteins, the removal of the lipid content with conservation of the tissue integrity by DESI-MS does not interfere with this standard histochemistry protocol. Importantly, the use of DMF based solvent systems or even other solvent systems with similar morphologically-friendly properties allows pathological evaluation to be performed on the same tissue section previously analyzed by DESI-MS but with acquisition of complementary results.
All combinations of DMF with other solvents used in the DESI-MS assays on mouse brain tissue sections were found to not destroy the native morphology of the tissue. Other pure solvents, such as ACN, DMF, THF, ethanol and others did not cause damage to the tissue integrity as observed in the H&E stains. A few other combinations that did not contain DMF, such as ACN:EtOH (1:1), MeOH:CHCl3 (1:1) and ACN:CHCl3 (1:1), did not destroy the native morphology of the tissue. The morphological effect that the DESI spray has on tissue appear to be related to the physical and chemical properties of the solvent systems itself.
While solubility of the proteic cellular and extracellular components of the tissue section in the DESI spray solvent system plays a role in the conservation of the tissue morphology integrity, the physical properties of the solvent system such as surface tension and its effects on the dynamics of the DESI spray primary droplets also impact the damage caused to the tissue. When solubilization of cellular and extracellular components that keep cellular morphological integrity intact occurs, the tissue becomes more susceptible to the mechanical action of the DESI spray droplets. Therefore, tissue damage should be related to both solubilization of tissue components and mechanical action of the DESI spray system. The fact that the morphologically-friendly solvent systems described here do not disturb tissue integrity appear to be related to the physical properties of the DESI spray primary droplets, but also on the solubility of tissue components on the solvent system.
Chemical information and image quality are important factors in DESI-MS imaging applications. The geometric parameters of the DESI spray as well as the choice of solvent system, gas pressure and solvent flow are important when optimizing imaging conditions. When the solvent system is modified, it is important to observe that the spray spot is stable and that the ion signal intensity is maximized for obtaining good quality 2D chemical images.
In the images shown in
The capability to perform DESI-MS imaging and histochemical analysis of the same tissue section is important in the investigation of diseased tissue. The comparison of histological features from stained sections with corresponding molecular images obtained by ambient imaging MS is important for accurate correlations between molecular signatures and tissue disease state. This is especially true in the analysis of cancerous tissue sections which are very often highly heterogeneous, with regions of containing various tumor cell concentrations (Agar N Y R, et al. (2011), Neurosurgery 68(2):280-290), infiltrative normal tissue (Dill A L, et al. (2011), Chemistry—a European Journal 17(10):2897-2902), precancerous lesions (Eberlin L S, et al. (2010), Analytical Chemistry 82(9):3430-3434), etc. Integration of DESI-MS imaging into a traditional histopathology workflow required that the mass spectrometric analysis not interfere with the morphology of the tissue section. Provided this is the case, the combination of the two different types of data (as represented by the case of superimposed images) greatly increases discrimination between different tissue types including that between diseased and healthy tissue.
To investigate this capability, human bladder, kidney and prostate cancer tissues along with adjacent normal samples were analyzed by DESI-MS imaging in the negative ion mode using one of our histology compatible solvent system and sequentially H&E stained. The lipid species present in the tissue sections were identified based on collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem MS experiments and comparison of the generated product ion spectra with literature data (Hsu F F & Turk J (2000), Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 11(11):986-999).
As previously reported for DESI-MS imaging of human bladder cancer in combination with statistical analysis using a standard ACN:H2O (1:1) solvent system, the ions that most significantly contribute to the discrimination between cancerous and normal bladder tissue are the free fatty acid and the fatty acid dimers, which consistently appear at increased intensities in the ion images of cancerous tissue when compared to normal tissue using the morphology friendly solvent system, DMF:EtOH (1:1) (
The optical image of the same tissue sections stained with H&E after DESI-MS imaging analysis is shown in
The non-destructive nature of the DMF based solvent system enables ion images to be overlaid with the H&E stain of the same tissue section for unambiguous diagnosis and correlation. For example, a small region of tissue within the cancerous section detected by DESI-MS as negative for bladder cancer based on the distribution of the FA dimer m/z 537.2 was confirmed as normal tissue by pathological evaluation of the overlaid DESI-MS ion image and H&E stain of the same tissue section. This unambiguous correlation is made possible through the use of the morphologically friendly solvent systems so that the histological data can be considered in combination with the DESI-MS imaging data. H&E stained serial sections of the same sample imaged using standard ACN:H2O (1:1) revealed that the tissue integrity was completely destroyed and were inadequate for pathological evaluation. The same histological observation that DESI imaging is histology compatible was obtained in the analysis of the H&E stained sections of five other human bladder cancer and paired normal samples, four human prostate cancer and paired normal samples and one kidney cancer and paired normal sample initially imaged by DESI-MS with a morphologically friendly solvent system.
Previously reported molecular information that allowed a diagnosis to be obtained for these types of cancer was consistent using the new solvent system. The capability of DESI-MS imaging to be histology compatible was further investigated by performing immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis with p63 antibody on bladder and prostate cancer tissue sections, which was performed after DESI-MS imaging. The gene p63 is one of the most commonly used basal cell-specific markers in the diagnosis of prostate cancer, whose expression is known to be down-regulated in adenocarcinoma of the prostate when compared to normal prostate tissue (Signoretti S, et al. (2000), American Journal of Pathology 157(6):1769-1775). Negative IHC staining of tumor protein p63 is commonly used as a clinical tool for identifying prostate cancerous tissue. The role of p63 in bladder carcinogenesis is not as clear as in prostate cancer (Comperat E, et al. (2006), Virchows Archiv 448(3):319-324), and positive staining of p63 is typically associated with both benign and malignant bladder epithelial cells.
Two bladder cancer samples and two prostate cancer samples were subjected to p63 IHC after DESI-MS imaging on the same tissue section. Detailed pathological evaluation of the tissue sections that were subjected to IHC after DESI-MS imaging confirmed that the DESI-MS analysis of the tissue lipid content did not interfere with the p63 IHC protocol, as the tissue remained intact after the imaging experiment. p63 IHC of the bladder sample was found to be positive for both cancerous and normal tissue sections. For the prostate cancer sample, UH0002-20, it was subjected to p63 IHC after DESI-MS imaging and again no damage to the morphology of the tissue was observed (
The results reported here introduce a novel capability of histologically compatible ambient molecular imaging by DESI-MS. The feasibility of DESI-MS imaging to be performed while tissue integrity and cell morphology is conserved allows ambient mass spectrometric analysis of tissue to be combined with traditional histopathology with the goal of providing better disease diagnostics. As DESI-MS imaging using histologically friendly solvent systems does not interfere with pathological analysis, the technique could be included as the initial step in the clinical tissue analysis workflow.
Methods reported herein will allow DESI-MS to be more broadly applied in the biomedical field, such as in intraoperative applications. In additional to biomedical applications, the morphologically compatible solvent system allows DESI-MS imaging to be combined to other analytical techniques for chemical analysis of the same tissue section.
Mouse brain tissue was analyzed using Touch spray. Brain spectra of the mouse are shown in
All touch spray experiments on tissue in this example were performed using a dry probe and then spraying methanol. The spectra are from mouse brain, prostate specimen, and reactive touch spray. Reaction experiments were done by dipping the touch spray probe into a solution mixture of cholesterol, cholesteryl linoleate, and adrenosterone and then spraying with a specific reagent.
Boxes are about 2 mm×2 mm.
Touch Spray has been demonstrated in uterine tissue.
For many intraoperative decisions, surgeons depend on frozen section pathology, a technique developed over 150 years ago. Technical innovations that permit rapid molecular characterization of tissue samples at the time of surgery are needed. Here, using desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI MS), the tumor metabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG) was rapidly detected from tissue sections of surgically-resected gliomas, under ambient conditions and without complex or time-consuming preparation. With DESI MS, IDH1-mutant tumors were identified with both high sensitivity and specificity within minutes, immediately providing critical diagnostic, prognostic and predictive information. Imaging tissue sections with DESI-MS shows that the 2-HG signal fully overlaps with areas of tumor and that 2-HG levels correlate with tumor content, thereby indicating tumor margins. Mapping the 2-HG signal onto three-dimensional MRI reconstructions of tumors allows the integration of molecular and radiologic information for enhanced decision making. Data herein show that metabolite-imaging mass spectrometry can transform many aspects of surgical care.
Introduction
The review of tissue sections by light microscopy remains a cornerstone of tumor diagnostics. In recent decades, monitoring expression of individual proteins using immunohistochemistry and characterizing chromosomal aberrations, point mutations and gene expression with genetic tools has further enhanced diagnostic capabilities. These ancillary tests, however, often require days to weeks to perform and the results become available long after surgery is completed. For this reason, the microscopic review of tissue biopsies frequently remains the sole source of intraoperative diagnostic information, with many important surgical decisions based on this information. This approach is time consuming, requiring nearly 30 minutes between the moment a tissue is biopsied and the time the pathologist's interpretation is communicated back to the surgeon. Tools that provide immediate feedback to the surgeon could transform the way surgery is performed.
Mass spectrometry offers the possibility for the in-depth analysis of the proteins and lipids that comprise tissues. The ionization profile of lipids within tumors can be used for classifying tumors and for providing valuable prognostic information such as tumor subtype and grade. Because DESI-MS is performed in ambient conditions with minimal pretreatment of the samples (Wiseman et al., Nat Protoc 3, 517-524 (2008); and Takats et al., Science 306, 471-473 (2004)), diagnostic information could be provided rapidly within the operating room (Agar et al., Neurosurgery 68, 280-289; discussion 290 (2011); and Eberlin et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (2013)). The ability to quickly acquire such valuable diagnostic information from lipids made us wonder whether we could use DESI MS to detect additional molecules of diagnostic value within tumors such as their metabolites.
Recently, recurrent mutations have been described in the genes encoding isocitrate dehydrogenases 1 and 2 (IDH1 and IDH2) in a number of tumor types including gliomas (Parsons et al., Science 321, 1807-1812 (2008)), intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas (Borger et al., Oncologist 17, 72-79 (2012)), acute myelogenous leukemias (AML) (Mardis et al., N Engl J Med 361, 1058-1066 (2009)) and chondrosarcomas (Amary et al., J Pathol 224, 334-343 (2011)). These mutant enzymes have the novel property of converting α-ketoglutarate to 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG) (Dang et al., Nature 462, 739-744 (2009)). This oncometabolite has pleiotropic effects on DNA methylation patterns (Lu et al., Nature 483, 474-478 (2012); Turcan et al., Nature 483, 479-483 (2012); and Xu et al., Cancer Cell 19, 17-30 (2011)), on the activity of prolyl hydroxylase (Koivunen et al. Nature 483, 484-488 (2012)) and on cellular differentiation and growth (Wang et al., Science (2013); Rohle, et al., Science (2013); and Losman et al., Science (2013)). While 2-HG is present in vanishingly small amounts in normal tissues, concentrations of several micromoles per gram of tumor have been reported in tumors with mutations in IDH1 and IDH2 (Dang et al., Nature 462, 739-744 (2009)). It has been reported that 2-HG can be detected by magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging hence providing a non-invasive imaging approach for evaluating patients (Lazovic et al., Neuro Oncol 14, 1465-1472 (2012); Andronesi, Sci Transl Med 4, 116ra114 (2012); Choi, Nat Med 18, 624-629 (2012); Elkhaled, et al., Sci Transl Med 4, 116ra115 (2012); Guo, et al., Acta Neurochir (Wien) 154, 1361-1370; discussion 1370 (2012); Kalinina et al., J Mol Med (Berl) 90, 1161-1171 (2012); and Pope et al., J Neurooncol 107, 197-205 (2012)). While such imaging approaches can provide information to plan surgery and to follow the response to chemotherapeutics, applying them to guide decision-making during an operation is currently impractical.
The data herein show that 2-HG can be rapidly detected from glioma samples using DESI MS under ambient conditions and without complex tissue preparation. Standard pathology techniques were used to cross-validate the data. Measuring specific metabolites in tumor tissues with precise spatial distribution and under ambient conditions provides a new paradigm for intraoperative surgical decision-making.
Materials and Methods
Tissue Samples:
The tissue samples used in this example were obtained from the BWH Neurooncology Program Biorepository collection as previously described (Eberlin et al., Cancer Res 72, 645-654 (2012)). They were obtained and analyzed under Institutional Review Board protocols approved at BWH. Informed written consent was obtained by neurosurgeons at BWH. The samples were sectioned for DESI MS analysis as previously described (Eberlin et al., Cancer Res 72, 645-654 (2012)). The tumors were classified in accordance with the WHO classification system. Resections of brain tumor lesions were performed using neuronavigation, with stereotactic mapping and spatial registering of biopsies performed as previously described (Agar et al., Neurosurgery 68, 280-289; discussion 290 (2011)). 3D-reconstruction of the tumor from MRI imaging data was achieved with 3-dimensional Slicer software package (Elhawary et al., Neurosurgery 68, 506-516; discussion 516 (2011)).
Histopathology and Immunohistochemistry:
In addition to banked snap frozen samples, all cases had tissue samples that were formalin-fixed and paraffin embedded. Sections of FFPE tissue were stained with an anti-isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1)-R132H antibody (clone HMab-1 from EMD Millipore) as previously described (Capper et al., Brain Pathol 20, 245-254 (2010)). Tissues were sectioned and immunostained as previously described (Eberlin et al., Cancer Res 72, 645-654 (2012)). Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained serial tissue sections were scanned using Mirax Micro 4SL telepathology system from Zeiss to generate digital optical images. Tumor content was evaluated by board-certified neuropathologists (S.S. and K.L.L.) through examination of H&E stained tissue sections and IDH1 R132H stained sections.
Identification of 2-Hydroxyglutarate by DESI MS:
The IDH1 status of each specimen was initially evaluated by IHC of a piece of FFPE tissue. For stereotactic cases, all biopsies were less than 0.4 cm and these specimens were divided in two (one portion was frozen for DESI MS studies and the other was processed for FFPE; the latter was used for IDH1 IHC).
To determine if 2-HG could be detected directly from glioma tissue sections by DESI MS, we analyzed human glioma samples by DESI MS in the negative ion mode using either an LTQ Ion Trap (Thermo Fisher Scientific, San Jose, Calif., USA) or an amaZon speed ion trap (Bruker Daltonics, Billerica, Mass.). The solvent used in these experiments consisted of either MeOH:H2O (1:1) or ACN:DMF (1:1) with a mass from m/z 100-1100. All experiments involving the amaZon speed ion trap were carried out using a 5 kV spray voltage, 130 psi nebulizing gas (N2) and a flow rate of 0.7 μL/min.
A description of the samples used in this study (analyzed with the LTQ Ion Trap) is shown in Table 1.
TABLE 1
Detailed description of samples used in IDH1 study.
IHC and DESI results are shown.
IHC IDH1
Normalized
Sample ID
Diagnosis
% tumor
R132H
m/z 147
2-HG
Low tumor cell concentration
G10
O-II
30
positive
12
positive
G22
O-II
10
positive
9
positive
G25
O-II
20
positive
72
positive
G40
O-II
5
positive
45
positive
G13
OA-II
5
positive
11
positive
G14
OA-II
40
positive
47
positive
G9
O-II/III
50
positive
44
positive
G11
O-II/III
20
positive
79
positive
G20
OA-III
30
positive
16
positive
G26
A-IV
20
positive
52
positive
G47
A-IV-O
5
positive
30
positive
High tumor cell concentration
G2
A-II
60
positive
74
positive
G49
O-II
100
positive
87
positive
G42
O-II
90
positive
148
positive
G43
O-II
80
positive
241
positive
G41
O-III
95
positive
178
positive
G23
O-III
95
positive
215
positive
G21
OA-III
95
positive
247
positive
G45
OA-III
100
positive
79
positive
G30
A-IV-O
80
positive
48
positive
G46
A-IV
90
ND
62
positive
IDH wild type by IHC
G3
A-III
60
negative
10
negative
G4
A-III
30
negative
6
negative
G5
A-IV-O
80
negative
29
negative
G6
A-IV
80
negative
12
negative
G8
A-IV
90
negative
10
negative
G27
A-IV
95
negative
16
negative
G28
A-IV
80
negative
126
positive
G29
A-IV-O
80
negative
25
negative
G31
A-IV
90
negative
17
negative
G32
A-IV
90
negative
15
negative
G33
A-IV
80
negative
41
positive
G34
A-IV
30
negative
8
negative
Negative ion mode DESI MS mass spectra of samples G23, and G31 are shown in
In total, thirty five human gliomas samples were analyzed including oligodendrogliomas, astrocytomas, and oligoastrocytomas of different grades and varying tumor cell concentrations using both ion trap mass spectrometers. Note that tissue analysis by DESI MS was performed without sample preparation but directly on tissue section. One means by which relative levels of a certain molecule can be calculated is by normalizing its signal to a reference signal or set of signals obtained from the sample. In this example, the total abundance of 2-HG signal at m/z 147 was normalized to the sum of total abundance of the forty most abundant lipid species detected from the glioma samples by DESI MS. As a small contribution of background signal at the same m/z 147 was present in DESI mass spectra, MS2 was performed for all samples in order to confirm the presence of 2-HG. This was especially important in some IDH1 mutant samples with low tumor cell concentrations and therefore much lower abundances of 2-HG in DESI mass spectrum. If the MS2 fragmentation pattern matched that of authentic 2-HG, the sample was determined to be IDH1 mutated. Discrepancies in the fragmentation pattern or absence of detectable levels of m/z 147 were interpreted as IDH wild-type by MS analysis. Results for DESI MS analysis were obtained using two solvent systems. Note that while the solvent system DMF:ACN (1:1) favored relative abundances of low m/z ions when compared to MeOH:H2O, similar trends in 2-HG were observed for both solvents. Interestingly, the ratio of m/z 147 to the sum of lipid species correlated with the tumor cell concentration determined for the sample by histopathological evaluation of serial tissue section, providing a direct measure of the 2-HG levels in tissue. Most samples that were negative for IDH1 mutation as determined by IHC did not present 2-HG in the DESI MS mass spectra, even if the sample presented high tumor cell concentration, as confirmed by tandem MS analysis (with the exception of two samples as noted in the text).
The analysis was able to determine IDH1 status by DESI MS detection of 2-HG in samples with low tumor cell concentration from full mass spectral data. For these samples, low detectable values of m/z 147 could be initially assumed as an indication of IDH negative mutation. Nevertheless, MS2 and MS3 of m/z 147 enabled IDH+ status confirmation for these samples, despite the low tumor cell concentration. DESI MS imaging was performed for a few of the samples analyzed to evaluate the distribution of 2-HG and other diagnostic lipid species compared to tumor cell distribution in tissue.
Genetic Analysis:
Archival surgical specimens were reviewed by a pathologist to select the most appropriate tumor-enriched area for analysis. Total nucleic acid was extracted from FFPE tumor tissue obtained by manual macro-dissection, followed by extraction using a modified FormaPure System (Agencourt Bioscience Corporation, Beverly, Mass.). SNaPshot mutational analysis of a panel of cancer genes that included IDH1 and IDH2, was performed as previously described (Dias-Santagata et al., EMBO Mol Med 2, 146-158 (2010)).
The primers listed below were used for targeted mutation analysis at codon R132 in IDH1 (nucleotide positions c.394 and c.395) and at codons R140 and R172 in IDH2 (nucleotide positions c.418, c.419, c.514 and c.515). PCR primers: IDH1 exon 4,5′-ACGTTGGATGGGCTTGTGAGTGGATGGGTA-3′ (forward; SEQ ID NO: 1) and 5′-ACGTTGGATGGCAAAATCACATTATTGCCAAC-3′ (reverse; SEQ ID NO: 2); IDH2 exon 4a (to probe codon R140), 5′-ACGTTGGATGGCTGCAGTGGGACCACTATT-3′ (forward; SEQ ID NO: 3), and 5′-ACGTTGGATGTGGGATGTTTTTGCAGATGA-3′ (reverse; SEQ ID NO: 4); and IDH2 exon 4b (to probe codon R172), 5′-ACGTTGGATGAACATCCCACGCCTAGTCC-3′ (forward; SEQ ID NO: 5), and 5′-ACGTTGGATGCAGTGGATCCCCTCTCCAC-3′ (reverse; SEQ ID NO: 6).
Extension primers: IDH1.394 extR 5′-GACTGACTGGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGGACTGACTGACTGAGATCCCCATAAGC ATGAC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 7), IDH1.395 extR 5′-TGATCCCCATAAGCATGA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 8), IDH2.418 extR 5′-GACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGGACTGACTGACTGACTGCCC CCAGGATGTTCC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 9), IDH2.419 extF 5′-GACTGACTGGACTGACTGACTGACTGAGTCCCAATGGAACTATCC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 10), IDH2.514 extF 5′-GACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGGACTGAC TGACCCATCACCATTGGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 11) and IDH2.515 extR 5′-GACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGACTGGACTGACTGACTGACTGACT GGACTGACTGAGCCATGGGCGTGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 12).
Identification of 2-Hydroxyglutarate with DESI MS
To determine if 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG) could be detected from glioma frozen tissue sections by DESI MS, the negative ion mode mass spectra from two glioma samples was first captured: an oligodendroglioma with mutated IDH1 (encoding the amino acid change R132H) and a glioblastoma with wild-type IDH1. 2-HG is a small organic acid containing two carboxylic acid functional groups in its structure. In the negative ion mode, the deprotonated form of 2-HG was detected at an m/z of 147.03 (C5H7O5−). Together with the rich diagnostic lipid information commonly observed from gliomas by DESI MS in the mass range m/z 100-1000, a significant peak at m/z 147 in an IDH1 mutated sample (
Tandem MS analysis (MS2) with a linear ion trap mass spectrometer was used to characterize the signal at m/z 147 (
2-HG Levels Correlate with Mutational Status and Tumor Cell Content
The levels of 2-HG were next monitored using DESI MS in a panel of 35 human glioma specimens (Table 1, above) including primary and recurrent oligodendrogliomas, oligoastrocytomas and astrocytomas of different grades. The samples were first characterized using a clinically validated antibody that selectively recognized the R132H mutant epitope and not the wild-type epitope from IDH127 (Table 1). 21 of the 35 samples had the R132H mutation. 2-HG levels were then measured in these samples using a linear ion trap LTQ DESI directly from frozen tissue sections. A peak at m/z 147 was detected and it was assigned to 2-HG by tandem MS (MS2) analysis, thereby providing strong independent evidence that these samples were mutated for one of the IDH genes. To account for the variability in desorption and ionization efficiency throughout the tissue and between samples, the 2-HG signal was normalized to the combined signal of the forty most abundant lipid species that were detected during each data acquisition (Table 1). In all of the 21 samples with the IDH1 R132H mutation, 2-HG was clearly detected with a limit of detection estimated to be on the order of 3 μmol 2-HG/g of tissue (
Notably, a correlation (R2=0.42) was observed between the concentration of tumor cells and the intensity of the 2-HG signal—samples with low concentrations of tumor cells (<50%) had lower 2-HG levels while samples with high concentrations of tumor cells (>50%) had higher 2-HG levels (
Interestingly, in two of the samples (G28 and G33) that were negative for the IDH1 R132H mutation immunohistochemical staining (
2D DESI MS Imaging of 2-HG in Glioma Sections Delineates Tumor Margins
To further validate DESI MS as a tool for monitoring 2-HG levels, two-dimensional (2D) DESI MS imaging were turned to for studying the spatial distribution of molecules across a tissue section. DESI MS imaging can be conducted in a manner that does not destroy a sample as it is being analyzed when a histologically compatible solvent system is used, so that the same tissue section can be stained with H&E and the spatial molecular information derived from DESI MS can be overlaid onto the optical image of the tissue. As such, this approach provides a powerful way to correlate 2-HG levels with histopathology.
2D DESI MS data was first acquired from frozen sections of human tumor cell lines that had been implanted into the brains of immunocompromised mice (
Tissue sections of human glioma specimens were next turned to that had been surgically resected. Using 2D DESI MS with both an LTQ Ion Trap (Thermo Fisher Scientific, San Jose, Calif., USA) and an amaZon Speed ion trap (Bruker Daltonics, Billerica, Mass., USA), accumulation of 2-HG was observed within a densely cellular glioblastoma with mutated IDH1 (
3D Mapping of 2-HG onto MRI Tumor Reconstructions
MRI information is critical for planning neurosurgical procedures. During the surgery, neuronavigation systems allow the neurosurgeon to register the position of surgical instruments with pre-operative plans (i.e. confirming where the tools are relative to the imaging findings). Surgeons can therefore digitally mark the site of a biopsy relative to the tumor in the MRI. Two IDH1 mutated gliomas were resected in this manner, using three-dimensional (3D) mapping, marking the positions of multiple biopsies in each case. In both cases, the 2-HG content of each stereotactic specimen was measured and normalized to its lipid signals. This information was then correlated with the tumor cell content of each stereotactic specimen, as determined by review of both H&E and immunostains for IDH1 R132H.
In the resection of an oligodendroglioma (
The second surgical resection was performed (
An oligoastrocytoma was resected in this second case. Multiple biopsy pieces were mapped and 2-HG levels were measured in each of them (
Metabolite Levels Correlated to their Originating Source
Using gliomas with IDH1 mutations as an example, the data show that a single metabolite, that can be monitored during surgery with ambient mass spectrometry (MS) techniques, can rapidly provide highly relevant information: tumor classification (i.e. 2-HG expressing CNS tumors are nearly always gliomas), genotype information (i.e. 2-HG expressing tumors carry mutations in IDH1 or IDH2), and prognostic information (i.e. 2-HG expressing tumors have a more favorable outcome), all with excellent sensitivity and specificity. Unlike more time consuming HPLC-MS approaches that are standardly used for quantifying 2-HG, ambient mass spectrometry techniques enable rapid data acquisition. Because of this, the approach described in this example provides the intraoperative guidance needed to discriminate tumor from normal brain tissue, a distinction that is of utmost importance in neurosurgery.
Because 70-80% of grade II and grade III gliomas as well as the majority of secondary glioblastomas contain IDH1 or IDH2 mutations (Yan et al., N Engl J Med 360, 765-773 (2009)), monitoring 2-HG with intraoperative mass spectrometry (MS) could conceivably become routinely used for surgeries of primary brain tumors, first to classify the tumor and then, if 2-HG is present, to guide optimal resection. The approach described here is applicable for the resection of all 2-HG producing tumors including chondrosarcoma and cholangiocarcinoma.
Other metabolites such as succinate and fumarate, which accumulate in specific tumor types (Linehan et al., Nat Rev Urol 7, 277-285 (2010)), are also valuable metabolite markers for guiding surgery with MS approaches. As metabolomic discovery efforts intensify, the cadre of useful metabolite markers will expand significantly. This will undoubtedly increase the breadth of applications and the diagnostic utility of MS-based approaches that utilize DESI technologies or other ambient ionization methods. Fluidly assessing molecular information, in a rapid timeframe allows surgeons to define tumor margins with molecular cues (i.e. “molecular margins”), enhancing the likelihood of achieving optimal tumor resection.
Additionally, the data show that two-dimensional DESI MS analysis provides adequate spatial resolution without damaging the tissue, which can subsequently be stained with H&E and visualized by standard light microscopy. Because the analyzed tissue remains intact, correlating the amount of metabolite with its originating source (i.e. stroma, blood vessel, tumor or normal non-neoplastic tissue) is achieved These capabilities will allow adjustment of resection during surgery and improve patient outcome. By permitting the integration of molecular and histologic information, DESI MS can now be used to address questions about tumor growth and heterogeneity that are difficult to address with standard tools.
Three-dimensional tumor mapping studies hold similar promise. The information derived with DESI MS, MRI and histology, can be integrated, compared and cross-validated. This rigorous approach helps better understand the clinical and research tools that are used as well as to shed light on tumor growth patterns and pathobiology in situ, for example, directly in the human brain. To date, surgery remains the first and most important treatment modality for patients suffering from brain tumors. The data herein show that metabolite-imaging mass spectrometry is a new tool with broad and powerful clinical and research applications to transform the surgical care of brain and other solid tumors.
Cooks, Robert Graham, Hamid, Ahmed Mohamed, Jarmusch, Alan Keith, Eberlin, Livia Schiavinato, Kerian, Kevin Scott
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